University of Richmond UR Scholarship Repository Master's Theses Student Research 4-1973 An orientation of the theoretical aspects of verbs in English Mostafa Hedayatnia Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/masters-theses Recommended Citation Hedayatnia, Mostafa, "An orientation of the theoretical aspects of verbs in English" (1973). Master's Theses. Paper 464. This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Research at UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AN ORIENTATION OF THE THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF VERBS IN ENGLISH BY MOSTAFA HEDAYATNIA A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN ENGLISH . ·' APRIL 1973 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Preface Chapter One: An Historical Perspective of Verbs • • 1 Chapter Two: Theoretical Aspects of Modern Linguistics • • • • • • • • • • • • • 20 Chapter Three: Verbs and Their Case Relationships in English • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 32 Chapter Four: The Productivity and Workability of the Generative Rules • . .. 49 Conclusions . .. 61 Footnotes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 64 Bibliography: • • • • • • 0 • • 0 • • • • • • • • • 69 76 Vita • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • '.~I APPROVAL SHEET ( / ' Second Reader of Thesis ~" .......... · Pref ace Traditional grammar originated in Greece in the fifth century B.C. and has been closely connected with philosophy and literary criticism ever since. Through the course of centuries, numerous grammars have been presented, with new ideas and definitions each "varying greatly in purpose, quality, basic assumption, and method of analysis." Each system of grammar has been productive in its own way as well as erroneous and has been succeeded by other systems still faulty. Consequently, in spite of the tremendous amount of theoretical data processed by investigators and experts, neither an explicit nor a complete grammar of a language has ever been approached. The reason simply is that grammar can­ not be both explicit and at the same time complete. More specifically, by approaching an explicit grammar, we retreat to an incomplete one owing to the insertion of many numbers of exceptions which test and destroy the rules. It is only during the past forty to fifty years that modern linguistics as a discipline has been introduced to investigate language as it is. Modern linguistics is mainly concerned with the description and explanation of the language as it is communicated, transmitted, and changed. ii It has never offered a prescription to the use of language. One of the scientific approaches to the investigation of language, Fillmore's case grammar, provides the basic orien­ tation of this thes1s~ Modern linguistics is the product of its past. It evolved from the traditional approach to structural grammar, and then the transformational. · The range of linguistics is vast and linguistics is still in its infancyo Transformational grammar is concerned, as Chomsky has postulated, with the competence of the speaker-listener of the language. The principal aim of the new discipline has been the construction of a general theory of language which would not differentiate between the so-called "civilized" and "primitive" languages. Such generalization of a gram­ matical theory and scientific investigation of language leads modern linguistics towards a new approach which had not been accomplished by traditional grammar. Chomsky's views and theoretical analyzations are open-ended and still waiting for newer, fresher, and deeper analyses. Verbs, along with other parts of speech, have lost their assigned traditional definitions on their way towards modern linguistics. Semantically, however, verbs have been inter­ preted to express some form of concrete or abstract motion.in . deep structure. It has also been postulated that each sen­ tence in its deep structure consists of a verb and one or more noun phrases, each associated with the verb syntacti­ cally in a particular case relationship. The purpose of this iii paper is to survey the theoretical aspects of verbs in deep structure and explore the relationships of other formatives in the sentence as they are interpreted, semantically and syntactically, on the basis of the formative verb which func­ tions as the nucleus of the sentence. I am indebted to Dr. James E. Duckworth for his direction on this thesis and the instruction from his classes, to Dr. Irby B. Brown and Dr. Harry L. Farmer for useful recommenda­ tions on the manuscript, and most of all to Dr. Edward C. Peple for his help throughout my studies at this university. CHAPTER ONE AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF VERBS One of the obvious things about grammar is that it is distasteful. Even gramzriar· students, teachers, and scholars may not be delighted with the subject. Experts in grammar would like to call themselves philologists, linguists, structuralists, morphophonemicists, or various other things, rather than grammarians. The aversion occurs because the connotation of the word grammar to ordinary citizens may be "good or bad" English, and they are not concerned with the denotation, an analytical and terminological study of sentences. To the professional students of language--lin­ guists or linguistic scientists--the word grammar still may mean something different. Since they are concerned with the scientific investiga~ion of language(s), their denotation should be something like "the total set of signals by which a given language expresses its meanings" or "the total structure 0£ a language." such denotations would include all the gram­ matical aspects of the language, from sound system to distinctive patterns. Grammar is what we learn when we learn a language. Presumably, any native speaker of a language, however unedu­ cated, knows the grammar of his language. This is one of the 2 psychological aspects of modern linguistics hypothesized by Noam Chomsky, the founder of the transformational-generative grammar, which we shall return to in the next chapter& Traditional grammar as we know it was first introduced in the fifth century B. c. by Plato who systematized the Greek tenses and distinguished three basic time references: present, past, and future. Three centuries later, this tense systema­ tization was not fully recognized by Dionysius Thrax, who contributed many fundamental insights of his own to Greek grammar, for which he was recognized as the greatest authority on that grammar. It is beyond the scope of this thesis to detect the omissions and misrepresentations of the Greek gram­ mar summarized by Thrax, and the later contributions of Appollonius Dyscolus and his successors. However, the succes- sive generations achieved great successes in divising and systematizing a formal term­ inology for the description of the classical Greek language as it was written and read aloud, • • • a terminology which, through the medium of translation and adaption to Latin, became the foundation for nearly two thousand years of grammatical theory and the teaching and study of the Greek and Latin languages •••• 1 In the year 1586, William Bullokar published a grammar book •. It was perhaps the first attempt at such a task in English. Following him there were other grammarians who pre­ sented their grammars with new ideas and definitions, each "varying greatly in purpose, quality, basic assumptions, and method of analysis.. "2 One of them was Michael Maittaire. 3 Maittaire published his grammar book in 1712. It is the oldest one from which citations are used in this paper. He says that, "grammar is an art, which teaches the way of writing and speaking truly and properly. 113 Half a century later, Garnnett defines grammar as: "the art of expressing the relations of words in construction, with due quality in 4 speaking, and orthography in writing." He believes that his definition of grammar was the best at his time because it was presented with a slight difference from that of his predecessors. It is understood then that, whatever a particular lan- guage may be, its grammar shows the art of using that language in speaking and writing. Garnnett's division of grammar into four parts~rtheopy.. (definition of letters), or Orthography {correct spelling), Prosody (study of pronunciation, meter, and rhyme), and Syntax (sentence-making)-is much the same as 5 the grarmnar of Maittaire, Harris, Cobbett, and Bullions. Nouns and verbs are the two chief parts of speech, accord- ing to Maittaire. His belief is supported by the ideas handed down from the great philosophers, namely Aristotle and Theodectes. Other parts of speech, he says, have been in­ 6 creased gradually by later philosophers, chiefly the Stoics. Maittaire defines a verb as such: "Verbs signify Motion, and every motion necessarily supposes some Being. or exis. t ence. 7 "Whatever a word denotes, either being, doing, or suffer- ing, is a verb"; says Garnnett. When action passes over some person or thing, the subject of that action, it is called 4 "Active Transitive Verb"; and in case the action is terminated in the person or thing that acts, and does not pass over to any other person or thing, it is called "An Active Intransi­ tive Verb. 118 A verb is then "a word which expresses what is affirmed or said of things; and denotes Being, Doing, or Suffering"; Garnnett furtµer explains concluding that "the very root of a sentence" can be a verb. 9 James Harris published his grammar book in 1751, almost forty years after Maittaire's. A separate heading, Attributes, is dedicated to adjectives, verbs, and particles with a de- tailed explanation for each. He also says that, "all verbs denote energy" (by energy he means Motion and its Privation).10 w. Snyder writes: Grammar is a science, which unfolds the principles of language. It teaches us, according to established usage, the cor- rect and appropriate disposition of words, 11 to express our ideas in writing or speaking. His division of grammar adds up to six parts (Orthography, Orthoepy, Etymology, Prosody, Syntax, and Orthometry), men­ tioned above.
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